Role in IT decision-making process:Align Business & IT GoalsCreate IT StrategyDetermine IT NeedsManage Vendor RelationshipsEvaluate/Specify Brands or VendorsOther RoleAuthorize PurchasesNot Involved

Work Phone:

Company:

Company Size:

Industry:

Street Address

City:

Zip/postal code

State/Province:

Country:

Occasionally, we send subscribers special offers from select partners. Would you like to receive these special partner offers via e-mail?YesNo

Your registration with Eweek will include the following free email newsletter(s):News & Views

By submitting your wireless number, you agree that eWEEK, its related properties, and vendor partners providing content you view may contact you using contact center technology. Your consent is not required to view content or use site features.

By clicking on the "Register" button below, I agree that I have carefully read the Terms of Service and the Privacy Policy and I agree to be legally bound by all such terms.

iPhone 4, Windows Vista Share 10 Remarkable Similarities

iPhone 4, Windows Vista Share 10 Remarkable Similarities

by Don Reisinger

2 of 11

Two Major Companies Making Mistakes

Perhaps the first major similarity between the iPhone 4 debacle and the mistake that was Windows Vista is that both products come from major companies in the market. Many tech lovers expect flawed products to come from small companies that don't have the cash or employee talent to deliver top-notch products, whereas major companies are expected to offer robust products that don't have big issues. And yet, both Microsoft and Apple delivered products with problems. And there is no excuse.

3 of 11

The Predecessor Was Major

The products that came before the iPhone 4 and Vista were wildly successful. Windows XP was a huge success for Microsoft that helped solidify its position in both the corporate world and the consumer market. Apple's iPhone 3G and 3GS were arguably the best smartphones ever released. They delivered most of the functionality users wanted, plus a design that has yet to be matched in the marketplace. Then Vista and the iPhone 4 hit store shelves. Although both performed well at launch, issues arose. The products aren't as dissimilar as Apple and its supporters want to believe.

4 of 11

Problem? What Problem?

Unfortunately, it seems as if Steve Jobs examined what Steve Ballmer did when Vista's issues started arising, and followed his lead. The iPhone 4's problems are being dismissed as minor inconveniences that consumers should live with. When Vista turned out to be too resource-heavy and was experiencing security issues, Microsoft said they would all be addressed over time. When Apple admitted that the iPhone 4 had antenna problems, Jobs said it was an industrywide issue that hopefully would be addressed in the future. As both companies pretended that their products' problems weren't significant, they made themselves look worse.

5 of 11

Other Companies Complain

Neither Microsoft nor Apple handled other companies well in regard to their respective products' problems. Microsoft, for example, continued to force Vista on vendors that didn't want to get bogged down with software that no one wanted. And Apple pointed to products from competitors to prove that the rest of the smartphones on the market have the same antenna issues as the iPhone 4. The companies basically took aim at others and have been forced to listen as those companies shot back with complaints of their own. Microsoft had to hear from HP and Dell, while Apple received a retort from RIM. As the competition fired back, it made Apple and Microsoft look worse.

6 of 11

It Starts Small

With both the iPhone 4 and Vista, the issues started small. For Vista, it was simply that the operating system was too new, too resource-intensive and too insecure. For the iPhone 4, there were complaints about signal reception. But those issues grew as more consumers complained and neither company, at least in the eyes of its customers, responded well enough to those complaints. And now, both companies are trying to work their way out from under the mistakes they made.

7 of 11

Sales Are Robust

As troublesome as Vista's problems were, it's important to keep in mind that Microsoft's operating system still did relatively well in overall sales compared with other Windows operating systems. Admittedly, Vista was never the success that XP was, but it still helped Microsoft generate billions of dollars of profit. The same can be said for the iPhone 4. As vexing as the product can be to consumers, Apple's smartphone is sold out online. It's one of the most coveted devices the company has ever sold. If nothing else, Vista and iPhone 4 prove that product issues are not a death knell.

8 of 11

Fight for It

Apple CEO Steve Jobs made one thing clear at his iPhone 4 news conference July 16: He will fight any and all opponents who say the iPhone 4 is flawed. As a CEO of a public company, that's to be expected (and commended, to some extent), but it follows exactly what Microsoft did with Vista. As the complaints about the operating system piled up and Vista became a laughingstock, Microsoft continued to say it was a fine OS that was misunderstood by stakeholders. Only after Windows 7 was released did Microsoft finally admit that Vista wasn't what the company had wished it would be. When will Apple admit the same about the iPhone 4?

9 of 11

The Issue Is Fixable

Let's not forget that the problems with Vista and the iPhone 4 could have been addressed before the products were released. After all, Microsoft could have built a more lightweight and secure operating system. And Apple could have changed the design of the iPhone 4. But both companies opted against such moves. And when their products hit store shelves, they were forced to deal with the consequences of those decisions. Apple might say a free case is a fix, but it really isn't. There is more to handling the iPhone 4's problems than slapping a case on it.

10 of 11

Placing Blame Elsewhere

Microsoft and Apple have both done a fine job of diverting the blame for their flawed products elsewhere. Apple, for example, has placed blame on the industry at large, AT&amp;T and even consumers for handling the iPhone 4 with a "death grip." Microsoft blamed vendors and the enterprise for poorer sales. Both companies eventually placed some blame on themselves, but it was clouded by their desire to pass the buck.

11 of 11

The Competition Gains

As Vista continued to experience troubles and the consumer unrest piled up, something strange happened to Microsoft: It watched its chief competitor in the operating system market, Apple, start gaining market share. Partly that was because of the value of Apple products, but Vista's troubles were also a significant factor. In the smartphone space, there is a good chance that the iPhone 4 is having, and will continue to have, similar market-share challenges. The Motorola Droid X is sold out, the HTC Droid Incredible is back-ordered and Google has Version 2.2 of its Android OS on the way. The competition is doing well in the face of the iPhone 4 snafus. It looks like Vista all over again.

Advertiser Disclosure:
Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which QuinStreet receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. QuinStreet does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.